infrastructure stability
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2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jens Strauss ◽  
Sebastian Laboor ◽  
Lutz Schirrmeister ◽  
Alexander N. Fedorov ◽  
Daniel Fortier ◽  
...  

Ice-rich permafrost in the circum-Arctic and sub-Arctic (hereafter pan-Arctic), such as late Pleistocene Yedoma, are especially prone to degradation due to climate change or human activity. When Yedoma deposits thaw, large amounts of frozen organic matter and biogeochemically relevant elements return into current biogeochemical cycles. This mobilization of elements has local and global implications: increased thaw in thermokarst or thermal erosion settings enhances greenhouse gas fluxes from permafrost regions. In addition, this ice-rich ground is of special concern for infrastructure stability as the terrain surface settles along with thawing. Finally, understanding the distribution of the Yedoma domain area provides a window into the Pleistocene past and allows reconstruction of Ice Age environmental conditions and past mammoth-steppe landscapes. Therefore, a detailed assessment of the current pan-Arctic Yedoma coverage is of importance to estimate its potential contribution to permafrost-climate feedbacks, assess infrastructure vulnerabilities, and understand past environmental and permafrost dynamics. Building on previous mapping efforts, the objective of this paper is to compile the first digital pan-Arctic Yedoma map and spatial database of Yedoma coverage. Therefore, we 1) synthesized, analyzed, and digitized geological and stratigraphical maps allowing identification of Yedoma occurrence at all available scales, and 2) compiled field data and expert knowledge for creating Yedoma map confidence classes. We used GIS-techniques to vectorize maps and harmonize site information based on expert knowledge. We included a range of attributes for Yedoma areas based on lithological and stratigraphic information from the source maps and assigned three different confidence levels of the presence of Yedoma (confirmed, likely, or uncertain). Using a spatial buffer of 20 km around mapped Yedoma occurrences, we derived an extent of the Yedoma domain. Our result is a vector-based map of the current pan-Arctic Yedoma domain that covers approximately 2,587,000 km2, whereas Yedoma deposits are found within 480,000 km2 of this region. We estimate that 35% of the total Yedoma area today is located in the tundra zone, and 65% in the taiga zone. With this Yedoma mapping, we outlined the substantial spatial extent of late Pleistocene Yedoma deposits and created a unique pan-Arctic dataset including confidence estimates.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 29-35
Author(s):  
Irina Maltseva ◽  
Yuliya Chernysh ◽  
Viacheslav Ovsiannikov

The availability of critical infrastructure through cyberspace makes national security dependent on the degree of its security. Critical infrastructure is a set of automated management systems, which provide the interaction of information and telecommunications networks that solve problems of public administration, defense, security and law enforcement, and others. The protection of critical infrastructure directly depends on the possession of the relevant structures of new weapons, the degree of its effectiveness, methods of use and means of protection against the same weapons of the enemy. It is necessary to address the issue of effective confrontation in cyberspace. The analysis of problems in the development of methods for assessing the functional stability of critical infrastructure in cyber confrontation requires the definition of basic methods and criteria that can be used in Ukraine to assess the stability of critical infrastructure. Cyber weapons, which carry out destructive information effects, are not weapons in the classical sense, because they do not physically damage the object of attack, but translate its information and automated control systems into a crisis mode of operation. The process of counteraction of two or more parties, in this form, is a cyber confrontation that is realized using a common common resource - the global information space. In the process of critical infrastructure management, cyber confrontation imposes additional requirements to ensure the sustainable operation of critical infrastructure. Stability is an integral property that is inextricably linked to the operating environment. Cyber resilience is an integrated indicator and is determined by cyber reliability, which reflects the ability to perform its tasks in a complex critical infrastructure management system in the context of information destructive influences.


Author(s):  
P. I. Kotov ◽  
V. Z. Khilimonyuk

The Infrastructure stability on permafrost is currently an important topic as the Arctic countries are developing climate change adaptation and mitigation programs. Assessing the sustainability of infrastructure facilities (especially in urban environments) is a difficult task as it depends on many parameters. This article discusses the city of Vorkuta, which is located in the northwest of Russia. This city differs from many others built on permafrost because most of buildings were built according to Principle II (The Active Method) of construction on permafrost with thawing soil prior to construction. Assessments of the engineering and geocryological conditions, basic principles of construction in the city, and reasons for building failures, were carried out within this study. The research is based on publications, open data about buildings, and visual observations in Vorkuta. About 800 buildings are in use in Vorkuta in 2020 (43% of what it was 50 years ago). According to the analysis, about 800 houses have been demolished or disconnected from utility lines over the past 50 years (about 250 of these are still standing, pending demolition). Since 1994, the construction of new residential buildings has almost stopped. Therefore, buildings that have been in use for over 50 years will account for 90% of the total residential housing stock by 2040. The effects of climate change in the city will depend primarily on the principle of construction employed and on the geocryological conditions of the district. Buildings constructed according to Principle I (The Passive Method) were found to be more vulnerable due to a decrease in permafrost bearing capacity. The impact of increasing air temperature on some of the buildings built on bedrock (the central part of the city) and some built on thawing soil will be minimal, as other factors are more significant.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 332-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samantha Bradshaw ◽  
Laura DeNardis

One of the most contentious and longstanding debates in Internet governance involves the question of oversight of the Domain Name System (DNS). DNS administration is sometimes described as a “clerical” or “merely technical” task, but it also implicates a number of public policy concerns such as trademark disputes, infrastructure stability and security, resource allocation, and freedom of speech. A parallel phenomenon involves governmental and private forces increasingly altering or co-opting the DNS for political and economic purposes distinct from its core function of resolving Internet names into numbers. This article examines both the intrinsic politics of the DNS in its operation and specific examples and techniques of co-opting or altering DNS’ technical infrastructure as a new tool of global power. The article concludes with an analysis of the implications of this infrastructure-mediated governance on network security, architectural stability, and the efficacy of the Internet governance ecosystem.


2014 ◽  
Vol 945-949 ◽  
pp. 2960-2966 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ji Chun Liu ◽  
Yun Xia Wu ◽  
Xi Yu ◽  
Jin Bo Liao ◽  
Tong Liu ◽  
...  

Based on the characteristics of current China's electricity power market, it is necessary to develop the self-regulation system for all market participants. This paper sets up index system based comprehensive risk evaluation for self-regulation construction, which covers market infrastructure stability, schedule fairness,trade compliance, electricity bill settlement risk. The evaluation criterion for each indicator is given afterwards. The key self-regulation information and subsequent trade behavior improvement measures can be attained after making the evaluation by calculating each index value, thus conducive to achieving the power market transaction stability and efficiency.


2012 ◽  
Vol 14 (01) ◽  
pp. 1250003 ◽  
Author(s):  
KATERINE GRANDMONT ◽  
JEFFREY A. CARDILLE ◽  
DANIEL FORTIER ◽  
TANIA GIBÉRYEN

Northern Quebec (Nunavik) presents an important intersection between population growth and climate change. The Inuit population of Nunavik has the fastest growth rate in any region of Canada. Land-use planning is an urgent and pressing need for northern communities built on permafrost, where there are considerable risks to development in areas where permafrost may thaw. As northern communities work to adapt to climate changes, they will be in great need of confident recommendations about locations of future development projects. This paper presents a case-study of the community of Tasiujaq and assesses the probability of thaw settlement of the surface, a process seriously affecting infrastructure stability. A method is developed for quantifying uncertainty in the resulting map, expressed as a function of judgmentbased uncertainty in the various factors that can influence eventual map quality. The best estimate of vulnerability and of the confidence in that estimate can be expressed in a single, simple map that allows an analyst to convey both of these vital aspects of the assessment process.


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